
- •Раздел I. Сегментная фонетика.
- •Слог. Принципы слогоделения. The types, structure and functions of syllables in English.
- •Syllable division rules for simple words and parts of compound words
- •2. Основное и второстепенное значение букв The primary and the secondary meaning of letters.
- •Чтение ударных гласных в различных типах слогов The primary sound meaning of vowels in different types of syllables.
- •Test II
- •4.Чтение ударных гласных в закрытом слоге Reading Vowels in Closed Syllables
- •Idioms, sayings:
- •5.Чтение двухэлементных сочетаний гласных
- •Vowel digraphs*
- •Principles of Reading Vowel Digraphs
- •Reading of digraphs “oo”, “ou” in homographes:
- •Vowel Letter Combinations
- •Чтение безударных гласных
- •Чтение согласных english letters’ meaning: consonants
- •Reading of “c, g, j”
- •Reading of Endings -(e)s, -(e)d
- •Правила чтения гласных с согласными. Reading of combinations of vowels with consonants.
- •Сочетания согласных Reading of English consonant clusters
- •Reading of “ng, nk”
- •Reading of letter “n”
МИНИСТЕРСТВО ОБРАЗОВАНИЯ РЕСПУБЛИКИ БЕЛАРУСЬ
Лингвогуманитарный колледж Учреждения образования
«Минский государственный лингвистический университет»
Раздел I. Сегментная фонетика.
Звуко-буквенные соответствия в английском языке.
Минск, 2007
Содержание
1. Слог. Принципы слогоделения. 3
2. Основное и второстепенное значение букв 8
3. Чтение ударных гласных в различных типах слогов 9
4.Чтение ударных гласных в закрытом слоге 20
5.Чтение двухэлементных сочетаний гласных 24
6. Чтение безударных гласных 36
7. Чтение согласных 42
8. Правила чтения гласных с согласными. 48
9. Сочетания согласных 51
Слог. Принципы слогоделения. The types, structure and functions of syllables in English.
Syllable formation in English is based on the phonological opposition vowel-consonant. Vowels are usually syllabic while consonants are not with the exeptions of [l], [m], [n], which become syllabic in a final position preceded by a consonant or between two final consonants: bottle [bɒtl], bottom [bɒtm], button [b/\tn].
A syllable is a speech unit which consists of a sound or a group of sounds one of which is heard more prominent than the others. This sound is the peak or the nucleus of syllable and is called syllabic (vowels and sonorants are usually syllabic).
The syllable consists of a vowel alone or is surrounded by consonants. Depending on it there are 4 types of them:
open (covered at the beginning)
CV→ [fa:ðə]
fully open
V→ [ə]
fully closed
CVC→ [teik]
closed (covered at the end)
VC→ [i:t]
It is not difficult to count syllables in a word but it is not easy to determine the syllabic boundary e.g. ׀possi׀bility (5 syllables).
The structure of English syllables can be summarized as follows:
Many syllables have one or more consonants preceding the nucleus. These make up the syllable onset: me, so, plow.
Many syllables have one or more consonants, following the nucleus. They make up the syllable coda. They are traditionally known as closed syllables: cat, jump.
The combination of nucleus and coda has special significance, making up the rhyming property of a syllable.
The English language has developed the closed type of a syllable as the fundamental one while in Russian it is the open type that forms the basis of syllable formation.
The other aspect of this component is syllable division. The problem of syllable division in case of intervocalic consonants and their clusters, like in such words as city, extra, standing and others.
Let us consider the first word [׀sɪtɪ]. There exist two possibilities:
the point of syllable division is after the intervocalic consonant;
the point of syllable division is inside the consonant.
In both cases the first syllable remains closed because the shot vowel should remain checked. The result of instrumentaly analyses shows, that the point of syllable division in such words is inside the intervocalic consonant.
The second case. There are two syllables in the word extra but where should the boundary between them fall?
[e-kstrə]. It is unlike that people would opt for a division between [e] and [kstrə] because there are no syllables in English which begin with consonant sequence [kstr].
Similarly, a division between [eksr] and [ə] would be unnatural.
[ek-strə], [eks-trə], [ekst-rə] are possible. People usually prefer either of the first two options here, but there no obvious way of deciding between them.
In some cases we may take into account the morphemic structure of words. For example, standing consists of two syllables; on phonemic grounds [stǽn-dɪŋ], on grammatical grounds [stǽnd-ɪŋ].